Tailoring Charge Density and Hydrogen Bonding of Imidazolium

Apr 26, 2011 - delivery of the genetic cargo into the nucleus.8,9 The cationic polymer ... binding, cytotoxicity, and in vitro gene transfection in Af...
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Tailoring Charge Density and Hydrogen Bonding of Imidazolium Copolymers for Efficient Gene Delivery Michael H. Allen, Jr.,† Matthew D. Green,‡ Hiwote K. Getaneh,§ Kevin M. Miller,^ and Timothy E. Long*,† Departments of †Chemistry and Macromolecules and Interfaces Institute, ‡Chemical Engineering, and § Biochemistry, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia 24061, United States ^ Department of Chemistry, Murray State University, Murray, Kentucky 42071, United States

bS Supporting Information ABSTRACT: Conventional free radical polymerization with subsequent postpolymerization modification afforded imidazolium copolymers with controlled charge density and side chain hydroxyl number. Novel imidazolium-containing copolymers where each permanent cation contained one or two adjacent hydroxyls allowed precise structuretransfection efficiency studies. The degree of polymerization was identical for all copolymers to eliminate the influence of molecular weight on transfection efficiency. DNA binding, cytotoxicity, and in vitro gene transfection in African green monkey COS-7 cells revealed structurepropertytransfection relationships for the copolymers. DNA gel shift assays indicated that higher charge densities and hydroxyl concentrations increased DNA binding. As the charge density of the copolymers increased, toxicity of the copolymers also increased; however, as hydroxyl concentration increased, cytotoxicity remained constant. Changing both charge density and hydroxyl levels in a systematic fashion revealed a dramatic influence on transfection efficiency. Dynamic light scattering of the polyplexes, which were composed of copolymer concentrations required for the highest luciferase expression, showed an intermediate DNAcopolymer binding affinity. Our studies supported the conclusion that cationic copolymer binding affinity significantly impacts overall transfection efficiency of DNA delivery vehicles, and the incorporation of hydroxyl sites offers a less toxic and effective alternative to more conventional highly charged copolymers.

’ INTRODUCTION Nonviral gene therapy is currently an area of intense research focus due to its growth as a potential treatment for numerous human diseases.1,2 Although viral gene therapies are highly effective, deleterious immunogenic response and limited DNA loading capacity are common.3,4 Nonviral delivery agents such as cationic polyelectrolytes offer a suppressed immunogenic risk and the opportunity to tailor macromolecular design.5,6 Controlled free radical polymerization techniques afford strategies for the design of various macromolecular architectures with precise molecular weights and narrow polydispersity.7 However, nonviral delivery agents need to overcome many obstacles that limit the efficiency of these therapeutics, including cellular uptake, endosomal escape, and delivery of the genetic cargo into the nucleus.8,9 The cationic polymer must also sufficiently compact DNA to effectively inhibit cellular, enzymatic degradation. Long et al.10 found that increasing poly(2-(dimethylamino)ethyl methacrylate) (PDMAEMA) molecular weight increased plasmid DNA (pDNA) binding affinity, leading to reduced enzymatic degradation and consequently increased luciferase reporter expression. Additional cationic polyelectrolytes for nonviral gene therapy include poly(L-lysine),11,12 poly(ethyleneimine) r 2011 American Chemical Society

(PEI),13,14 poly(amido amine) dendrimers,1517 and step-growth polymers such as cationic polysaccharides1820 and ionenes.21 Cationic polymers electrostatically bind and condense anionic pDNA, forming a polyplex. Various factors, including molecular weight, 10,22 charge density,23 and hydrogen bonding,24 impact polyplex stability. Rungsardthong et al.25 observed a greater polyplex binding affinity and smaller more compact polyplexes as the degree of ionization in PDMAEMA samples increased with varying pH; however, the authors did not report the impact on transfection efficiency. Anderson et al. 26 later reported that polymers with tightly bound or encapsulated pDNA prevented pDNA release, and loosely bound pDNA degraded. They concluded that both factors lowered transfection efficiency. Lauffenburger et al.27 showed as molecular weight of poly(L-lysine) increased above a critical value, the transfection efficiency decreased due to limited pDNA-vector unpacking. This is in contrast to Long et al.,10 but points to the importance of composition on the transfection efficiency as a function of molecular weight. Received: March 10, 2011 Revised: April 13, 2011 Published: April 26, 2011 2243

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Biomacromolecules Polymers containing histidine or imidazole are known to enhance gene expression compared to unmodified polymers.23,2830 Histidine-rich peptide antibiotics also enable efficient DNA delivery properties in mammalian cells.31,32 Peptides including LAH4 and Tat peptides functionalized with histidine units displayed high pDNA delivery efficiencies.33,34 Midoux and co-workers35 prepared histidylated poly(L-lysine) and found the incorporation of histidine residues increased transfection 34 orders of magnitude compared to poly(L-lysine). In contrast, Benns et al.36 incorporated histidine onto poly (L-lysine) using a grafting approach. They also found an increase of transfection compared to the poly(L-lysine) homopolymer. Poly(L-lysine) dendrimers showed increased transfection when substituted with histidine-rich residues at the terminal sites of the dendrimer.37 Langer et al.38 employed a high-throughput technique to synthesize a library of poly(β-amino esters) to study the influence of polymer structure on transfection efficiency. They found that polymeric composition with alcohol or imidazole functionalities resulted in the highest luciferase expression. Langer invoked the proton sponge hypothesis to explain the improvement in DNA delivery. The pKa of the conjugate acid of the imidazole tertiary nitrogen is ∼6, suggesting a buffering capacity near endosomal pH.39 According to the proton sponge hypothesis, the polyelectrolyte is further protonatable inside the acidic endosome leading to endosomal swelling and rupture. We report herein novel, pH-sensitive, imidazolium copolymers, and our studies demonstrate the potential synergy of charge density and hydrogen bonding on transfection efficiency. 1-Vinylimidazole homopolymers require subsequent alkylation to create a water-soluble, cationic polyelectrolyte capable of binding anionic pDNA. Imidazoles upon functionalization provide the permanent cationic imidazolium site; however, the ring loses the ability to hydrogen bond.40 Alkylation with hydroxylcontaining groups ensures adjacent hydrogen bonding sites in a controlled fashion. Reineke et al.24 showed a combination of electrostatic interactions, and hydrogen bonding enhanced the association between the polymer and DNA. They suggested that the incorporation of hydrogen bonding sites allowed for the design of less-toxic polymers due to a reduction in cytotoxic cationic charge that is necessary to effectively interact with pDNA. However, Reineke studied low molecular weight polymers (degree of polymerization e 15), and they concluded that pDNApolymer interactions increased in the presence of hydroxyl groups and binding was independent of hydroxyl concentration. Reineke and co-workers41,42 also showed the addition of hydroxyl groups improved transfection efficiency, but they did not report a systematic change in pDNA delivery with increasing hydroxyl concentration. Reineke further determined hydroxyl stereochemistry effectively controlled pDNApolymer binding affinity in their carbohydrate-based polymers. In this work, we tailored charge density and hydroxyl concentration through functionalization of 1-vinylimidazole homopolymers of relatively high molecular weight. All polymeric precursors had an equivalent degree of polymerization to eliminate molecular weight influences on transfection efficiency. Hydroxyl incorporation precisely ranged between zero to two per cationic charge to reveal the influence of hydroxyl incorporation in the absence of significant molecular weight differences. We evaluated the influence of charge density and hydroxyl incorporation on DNA binding, cytotoxicity, and in vitro DNA delivery.

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Scheme 1. Post-polymerization Quaternization of Poly(1vinylimidazole) for the Synthesis of Imidazolium-Containing Copolymers

’ EXPERIMENTAL SECTION General Methods and Materials. 1-Vinylimidazole was distilled under reduced pressure (1-VIM, 99%, Aldrich). 2,20 -Azobisisobutyronitrile (AIBN, 99%, Sigma-Aldrich) was recrystallized from methanol. Bromoethane (99%, Sigma-Alrich), 2-bromoethanol (95%, Aldrich), and 3-bromo-1,2-propanediol (97%, Aldrich) were used as received. Deuterium oxide (D2O, 99.9% Cambridge Isotope Laboratories) was used as received for 1H NMR spectroscopy. A Millipore Direct-Q5 purification system produced ultrapure water having a resistivity of 18.2 MΩ 3 cm. All other solvents and reagents were used as received from commercial sources without further purification unless specifically noted elsewhere. 1H NMR spectra were obtained using a Varian Unity 400 MHz spectrometer. Synthesis of Poly(1-vinylimidazole) and Imidazolium Copolymers. In a typical polymerization, 1-VIM was charged with 0.5 mol % AIBN in DMF at 20 wt % solids in a 100 mL round-bottomed flask with a magnetic stir bar. The reaction mixture was sparged with nitrogen for 30 min and submerged in a preheated oil bath at 65 C. After 24 h, the polymer was precipitated into ethyl acetate, redissolved in methanol, and precipitated a second time into ethyl acetate to remove any residual DMF. The polymer was dried under vacuum at 40 C for 24 h to constant weight. The molecular weight of the homopolymer was measured using size exclusion chromatography (SEC) (flow rate of 0.8 mL/min through 2 Waters Ultrahydrogel Linear and 1 Waters Ultrahydrogel 250 columns, solvent: 28.5/71.5 EtOH/H2O (v/v %) 0.017 M Tris/0.05 M HCl pH = 2; standards: PEO). Upon drying, various extents of quaternization of poly(1-hydroxyethyl-3-vinylimidazolium bromide-co-1-vinylimidazole) (PHEVIM) were synthesized. In a typical reaction, various equivalents of 2-bromoethanol were charged into a 25 mL, round-bottomed, flask containing poly(1-vinylimidazole) (PVIM; 0.500 g) dissolved in methanol at 25 wt % solids. The reaction was refluxed at 75 C for 24 h to obtain different quaternization percentages. The copolymer was precipitated into ethyl acetate and dried under reduced pressure at 40 C for 24 h. The synthesis of poly(1-ethyl-3-vinylimidazolium bromide-co-1-vinylimidazole) (PEVIM) and poly(1-(1,2-propanediol)-3-vinylimidazolium bromide-co-1-vinylimidazole) (PDHVIM) followed the procedure described above (Scheme 1, Table 1). The degree of quaternization was determined using 1H NMR. All samples were dialyzed against ultrapure water for 48 h using Spectra/Por dialysis tubing (MWCO 3500 g/mol). Lyophilization was used to recover samples prior to characterization. AcidBase Titration. Copolymer samples were dissolved in dH2O at a concentration of 0.010 M. The solutions were brought to an initial pH of 11.0 using a concentrated NaOH solution with a negligible change to the copolymer solution volume. The samples were then titrated with a standardized 2.0 M HCl solution until the solution reached a pH of 3.0, and the pH of the solution recorded using an Orion 3-Star plus pH portable meter (Thermo). DNA Gel Shift Assay. Polyplexes were prepared using 0.20 μL of gWiz-Luc plasmid (1 μg/μL in H2O, Aldevron) in ∼28 μL of 2244

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Biomacromolecules Table 1. Polymers Discussed in this Paper

1 Tris-acetate-EDTA (TAE, Sigma) buffer. Various amounts of copolymer were added to the DNA solutions targeting nitrogen/ phosphorus (N/P) ratios from 1 to 14. Upon addition of copolymer to the DNA solutions, the solutions were incubated at room temperature for 30 min to allow for polyplex formation. After 30 min, 7 μL of gel loading buffer (Sigma) was added to each solution. The solutions were added to a 0.9 wt % agarose gel containing SYBR Green I (Sigma). Gel electrophoresis occurred at 70 V for 90 min in 1 TAE buffer. The gels were imaged using a MultiDoc-it Digital Imaging System (UVP). Heparin Competitive Binding Assay. Polyplexes were prepared using 0.20 μL of gWiz-Luc plasmid (1 μg/μL in H2O) in ∼28 μL of 1 Tris-acetate-EDTA (TAE, Sigma) buffer. Copolymer was added to the DNA solutions targeting an N/P ratio of 20. After a 30 min incubation at room temperature, the polyplexes were challenged with 0.01  0.40 (U) of heparin, which corresponded to 0.052.0 U/μg of DNA. The polyplex-heparin solution was incubated for 30 min at room temperature and 7 μL of gel loading buffer was subsequently added to each solution. The solutions were added to a 0.9 wt % agarose gel containing SYBR Green I. Gel electrophoresis occurred at 70 V for 90 min in 1 TAE buffer. The gels were imaged using a MultiDoc-it Digital Imaging System (UVP). Cell Culture. African green monkey COS-7 cells were cultured in Dulbecco’s modified Eagle’s medium (DMEM) containing 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS), 100 U/mL of penicillin, and 100 μg/mL of streptomycin (all reagents from Mediatech). Cells were incubated at 37 C with 5% CO2 in a 95% humid atmosphere. Cell Viability Assay. Copolymer cytotoxicity was determined using the 3-[4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl]2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT, Sigma-Aldrich) conversion assay. Copolymer samples were dissolved in ultrapure water at a concentration of 1 mg/mL. The copolymer stock solution was diluted with DMEM to obtain copolymer solutions ranging in concentration from 1 to 200 μg/mL. The samples were added to a 96-well plate containing COS-7 cells seeded at a density of 5000 cells/well. COS-7 cells were plated 24 h prior to the experiment. After the 24 h incubation, the cells were rinsed with 100 μL of DMEM followed by the addition of 100 μL of the diluted copolymer solutions. After 24 h, the solutions were aspirated and cells were rinsed with 100 μL of 1X Hank’s buffered salt solution (HBSS). For 4 h at 37 C, the cells were treated with 100 μL of a 0.5 mg/mL MTT solution in DMEM, and the media was subsequently aspirated and the formazan product dissolved with DMSO. A SPECTRAmax M2 microplate reader (Molecular Devices Corp.) was used to measure the absorbance at 570 nm for each well. Luciferase Expression Assay. To prepare the polyplex solutions, gWiz-Luc plasmid (1 μg/μL in H2O) was diluted in DMEM and serumcontaining DMEM to a concentration of 1.2 μg/mL, and concurrently, copolymer solutions were diluted at various concentrations in DMEM and serum-containing DMEM corresponding to the targeted N/P ratios. Upon 10 min of incubation, equal volumes of the solutions were combined (final gWiz-Luc concentration of 0.6 μg/mL) and incubated

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for 30 min at room temperature. COS-7 cells were plated on 24-well plates at a density of 1.0  105 cells/well 24 h prior to the experiment. The cells were then rinsed with 1 HBSS and treated with 500 μL of the transfection solution. After a 4 h incubation at 37 C with 5% CO2, the transfection solution was aspirated and replaced with complete DMEM and incubated for 48 h at 37 C with 5% CO2 to allow for protein expression. Cells were rinsed with 500 μL of PBS and 125 μL of lysis buffer was added to each well. The cells were scraped and after a 30 min incubation at room temperature the lysate was subjected to a 80 C/ 37 C freezethaw cycle. Luciferase activity was measured following the instructions for the SPECTRAmax L luminometer (Molecular Devices Corp.) and the luciferase assay kit (Promega). Protein concentration was determined using a DC protein assay kit (Bio-Rad Laboratories). Gene expression was reported as relative light units per milligram of cell protein lysate (RLU/mg). Experiments were repeated twice with samples collected in quadruplicate. Wide-Field Fluorescence Optical Microscopy. Polyplexes were prepared for cellular uptake experiments with Cy5-labeled gWizLuc plasmid (0.1 μg/μL in H2O). The pDNA solution was diluted with DMEM to a concentration of 2.0 μg/mL and combined with a corresponding copolymer-DMEM solution to produce polyplexes with an N/P ratio corresponding to the highest transfection efficiency as determined with the luciferase expression assay. After a 30 min incubation, the solutions were applied to COS-7 cells plated at a concentration of 1.0  105 cells/well on a 24-well plate and subsequently incubated for an additional 30 min at 37 C, 5% CO2. A total of 1 μL of 40 ,6-diamidino2-phenylindole (DAPI, 1 μg/μL in PBS) was added to the transfection media, and the cells were incubated for an additional 30 min at 37 C, 5% CO2. The cells were then rinsed twice with PBS and fixed with paraformaldehyde (2 wt % in PBS, Sigma). In addition, membranes were permeabilized with TritonX-100 (0.1 vol % in PBS, Sigma), washed with PBS, and F-actin filaments were stained with Alexa Fluor phalloidin 488 (5 U/mL in PBS, Invitrogen). The fixed cells were imaged using a Nikon Eclipse TE2000-U inverted microscope with a Nikon C-HGFI Intensilight epifluorescence system and Nikon DS-Qi,Mc BW CCD digital camera. The multichannel fluorescence images were acquired using UV-2EC, Cy5, and F/EGFP filters. Dynamic Light Scattering (DLS). Copolymer and gWiz-Luc plasmid were diluted in separate DMEM solutions. After 10 min, the copolymer solution was added to the gWiz-Luc plasmid solution and allowed to incubate for 30 min at 25 C. Varying copolymer concentrations produced a range of N/P ratios (final DNA concentration of 1 μg/ mL), and all experiments were performed in triplicate at 25 C. Size and zeta-potential of the polyplexes were determined with a Zetasizer Nano Series Nano-ZS (Malvern) instrument equipped with a 4.0 mW HeNe laser at a scattering angle of 173 producing a wavelength of 633 nm. All polyplexes displayed monomodal hydrodynamic diameters, and data was analyzed using Dispersion Technology Software (DTS) version 6.12.

’ RESULTS AND DISCUSSION Free radical polymerization afforded PVIM with a numberaverage molecular weight (Mn) of 23000 g/mol with a PDI of 1.89 relative to poly(ethylene oxide) standards using size exclusion chromatography. DLS confirmed that the aqueous mobile phase eliminated the presence of large scale aggregates. The synthesis of a PVIM homopolymer precursor eliminated the influence of the degree of polymerization on subsequent transfection experiments.10,43 Controlled stoichiometries of 2-bromoethanol provided a series of quaternized copolymers (PHEVIMx; x = mol % charge) with varying amounts of charge. 1H NMR spectroscopy verified the chemical structure of the copolymers and determined the extent of quaternization. Acidbase titration also qualitatively 2245

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Figure 1. Acidbase titration to determine buffering capacity of various PHEVIM copolymers.

Figure 3. COS-7 cell viability as a function of (a) quaternization percentage at various copolymer concentrations and (b) polyplex N/P ratios. Values represent mean ( SD (n = 8).

Figure 2. Electrophoretic gel shift assay of PHEVIM copolymers at various quaternization percentages to determine copolymerpDNA complexation: a, 0%; b, 13%; c, 25%; d, 50%; e, 65%; f, 100%. Arrows indicate N/P ratio necessary for complete DNA binding.

verified the extent of quaternization of the PHEVIM copolymers and found a pKa of approximately 5.5 for PVIM (Figure 1). As quaternization increased in the copolymer, fewer sites were available for protonation, and upon titration from basic to acidic solutions, the buffering capacity of the copolymer decreased. As expected, the fully quaternized copolymer did not buffer an aqueous solution and behaved similar to a strong acid/strong base titration. DNA binding assays further confirmed quaternization differences between PHEVIM copolymers, and these assays also determined the molar ratio of copolymer necessary to effectively bind pDNA. As shown in Figure 2, as the quaternization level increased, the N/P ratio for PHEVIMx copolymerpDNA complexation decreased. Water-soluble PVIM did not bind pDNA at a physiological pH due to the absence of charge. The results clearly showed that an increase in the charge density of the copolymer required less copolymer to bind the negatively charged pDNA.

The MTT conversion assay determined cytotoxicity of the PHEVIM copolymers. Figure 3a shows the influence of quaternization percentage and copolymer concentration on COS-7 cell viability. As the extent of quaternization of the copolymer increased, the cytotoxicity of the copolymer sample increased. PHEVIM25 and PHEVIM13 did not display cytotoxicity even at high copolymer concentrations (∼200 μg/mL). Kissel et al.44 determined that a higher concentration of cationic charge on a polymer leads to greater cytotoxicity. Figure 3b shows the effect of polyplexes on COS-7 cell viability. The selected N/P ratios were optimized according to the transfection experiments. All N/P ratios of the copolymers and Superfect concentration evaluated were nontoxic. This ensured that the polyplexes for our in vitro luciferase expression assay were at nontoxic concentrations. The luciferase expression assay evaluated the influence of charge density of PHEVIMx copolymers on in vitro pDNA delivery. Factors that influence gene expression include the stability of the copolymerpDNA complex,45 and if the complex is not stable, premature dissociation will occur in the transfection process, resulting in minimal transgene expression. In addition, highly stable complexes will not release pDNA, also resulting in low expression.46 Thus, it is necessary to balance the copolymer pDNA binding affinity to achieve maximum transfection efficiency. We investigated various quaternization percentages over a range of N/P ratios, and the initial N/P ratios for each quaternization percentage corresponded to the onset of stable polyplex formation, as determined using the DNA gel shift assay. MTT cytotoxicity results determined the nontoxic N/P ratios used for the luciferase expression assay. Figure 4 shows luciferase 2246

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Figure 5. Fluorescence optical micrographs of COS-7 cells transfected with Cy5-labeled PHEVIM (50% quaternized)/pDNA polyplexes. A total of 1 μg DNA per 100000 cells, N/P = 8, were fixed and stained 1 h after treatment with polyplexes. (a) Multichannel composite image, (b) Cy5 channel showing polyplexes, (c) DAPI channel showing cellular nuclei, (d) AlexaFluor 488-Phollodin channel showing F-actin.

Figure 4. In vitro gene transfection efficiency as a function of N/P ratio at various charge densities in COS-7 cells in (a) serum-free and (b) serum-containing media. Nontoxic N/P ratios chosen for luciferase transfection. Values represent mean ( SD (n = 4).

expression as a function of charge density and N/P ratio in (a) serum-free media and (b) serum-containing media in comparison to Superfect. The optimal N/P ratios for DNA delivery in serum-free (or serum) for PHEVIM13, PHEVIM25, PHEVIM50, PHEVIM65, and PHEVIM100 were 20 (or 30), 8 (or 20), 8 (or 1015), 8 (or 1015), and 4 (or 46), respectively. Increased polyplex stability, as a result of increased positive charge on the copolymer, decreased the optimal N/P ratio for DNA delivery. For transfection in serum-free media, all charged copolymers were less than an order-of-magnitude lower than Superfect and two-orders-ofmagnitude higher than naked DNA, which we attributed to protein aggregation with the copolymers.47 We observed a 5-fold increase in maximum luciferase expression as the charge density of the PHEVIM copolymer increased from 13 to 25% attributed to increased polyplex stability. As charge density increased further, the maximum transfection efficiency, which we defined as the maximum RLU/mg for each quaternization percentage regardless of N/P ratio, decreased slightly because the complexes did not release DNA effectively. Our findings agreed well with previously published work by Zhou et al.43 Zhou et al. synthesized various percentages of quaternized cellulose with the same degree of polymerization and concluded an intermediate quaternization percentage transfected the most efficiently due to intermediate binding stability. Figure 4b shows the results for luciferase expression in serum-containing media. The luciferase expression of all samples, including Superfect, decreased approximately one-order-of-magnitude and shifted the optimal transfection efficiency for each quaternized copolymer to a higher N/P ratio as a result of serum aggregation. The overall trend remained

Figure 6. Polyplex hydrodynamic diameter (() and ζ-potential (9) as a function of charge density. The N/P ratios chosen exhibited the greatest transfection efficiency for each quaternization percentage investigated. Values represent mean ( SD (n = 3).

the same, and PHEVIM25 exhibited a maximum transfection efficiency, larger than any other quaternized samples. Figure 5 supports that polyplexes entered the cell and gained entry into the nucleus. Figure 6 summarizes the polyplex hydrodynamic diameter and ζ-potential as a function of charge density. The analyzed N/P ratios corresponded to the maximum transfection efficiency of each copolymer sample in serum-free media. The hydrodynamic diameter decreased from ∼300 nm to ∼150, while ζ-potential increased slightly as quaternization percentage increased. The decrease in polyplex size with an increase in quaternization percentage suggested tighter binding between the polymer and pDNA, further supporting the decrease in luciferase expression above 25% quaternization. We synthesized two additional 25% quaternized copolymers to study the effects of adjacent hydroxyl number on transfection efficiency. PEVIM25 did not contain hydroxyl groups (n = 0), PHEVIM25 contained on average one hydroxyl group for every four repeat units (n = 1), and PDHVIM25 contained two 2247

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Figure 7. Electrophoretic gel shift assay of imidazolium copolymers of various hydroxyl content to determine copolymer-pDNA complexation: a, PEVIM; b, PHEVIM; c, PDHVIM. Arrows indicate N/P ratio necessary for complete DNA binding. Heparin competitive binding assay to determine polyplex stability as a function of increasing: d, PEVIM; e, PHEVIM; f, PDHVIM. Arrows indicate onset of polyplex disassembly.

hydroxyl groups for every four repeat units (n = 2). These copolymers revealed the influence of a pendant hydroxyl substituent on pDNA transfection. Reineke et al.24 found the incorporation of hydroxyl groups further enhanced the binding of polymer to pDNA through hydrogen bonding and concluded hydrogen bond formation between polymer and pDNA would serve as a less toxic alternative to high charge density polyelectrolytes. DNA gel shift and heparin competitive binding assays, shown in Figure 7, revealed the influence of hydroxyl concentration on pDNA binding and polyplex stability. As hydroxyl number increased from n = 0 to n = 2, the initial N/P ratio required for polyplex formation decreased from 10 to 6 to 4, respectively, suggesting hydrogen bond formation between the copolymer and pDNA. A heparin competitive binding assay further probed this copolymerpDNA binding stability. The assay challenged the copolymerpDNA complexes with various concentrations of heparin to cause polyplex dissociation. The greater the amount of heparin required to cause polyplex dissociation, the greater the copolymerpDNA binding affinity. Figure 7eg shows that the heparin concentration required to cause full polyplex dissociation at an N/P of 20 increased as the hydroxyl number increased; PEVIM25 dissociated at a concentration of 0.05 U/μg DNA, PHEVIM25 at 0.20 U/μg, and PDHVIM25 at 0.30 U/μg. These results supported the presence of stronger interactions between the copolymer and pDNA as hydroxyl number increased. An MTT cytotoxicity assay determined the effect of increasing hydroxyl number on cell viability of COS-7 cells. Shown in Figure 8a, all copolymer formulations were nontoxic

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Figure 8. COS-7 cell viability as a function of (a) copolymer hydroxyl composition at various copolymer concentrations and (b) polyplex N/P ratios. Values represent mean ( SD (n = 8).

at concentrations to 150 μg/mL. Figure 8b, confirmed polyplex formulations containing copolymer concentrations between 1 and 150 μg/mL were also nontoxic. The MTT assay and electrophoretic experiments collectively demonstrated control over copolymerpDNA binding affinity. Cell viabilities remained >90% with functional substituent variation, thus, avoiding the expected toxicity associated with increased charge density on polymer vehicles. An in vitro luciferase assay determined the transfection efficiency of the imidazolium copolymers as a vehicle for delivery of pDNA. The N/P ratios were chosen according to the same method described above in the charge density discussion. The optimal N/P ratios for pDNA delivery (Figure 9) in serum-free (serum) for PEVIM25 were 25 (25), 8 (20) for PHEVIM25, and 8 (20) for PDHVIM25. PEVIM25 luciferase expression in serum-free media was 2 orders of magnitude lower than Superfect, whereas PHEVIM25 was of similar magnitude to Superfect through the addition of a hydroxyethyl group instead of an ethyl group attached to the imidazolium ring. Therefore, the addition of the hydroxyl group, which presumably forms hydrogen bonds with DNA, dramatically increased the transfection efficiency of the imidazolium copolymers. When two hydroxyl groups were present in the repeating unit, further increasing hydrogen bonding substituents, PDHVIM25 displayed an order-of-magnitude decrease compared to PHEVIM25. In addition, PDHVIM25 exhibited an order of magnitude greater luciferase expression than PEVIM25. These results confirm the results found in the charge density experiments, that is, the copolymer with intermediate binding with pDNA was most effective for pDNA delivery. The serum transfection results, shown in Figure 9b, illustrate a decrease in luciferase expression in all samples. Superfect luciferase 2248

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DLS determined polyplex hydrodynamic diameter and ζpotential of the imidazolium copolymers. DLS revealed the greater amount of hydroxyl groups present on the repeating unit, the tighter the binding of copolymer to pDNA as evidenced with the decrease in polyplex hydrodynamic diameter (Figure 10). This data further confirmed that copolymers with an intermediate binding affinity for pDNA were the most effective for transfection. PEVIM25 polyplex large hydrodynamic size and negative ζ-potential suggested the polyplexes form aggregates in solution limiting the transfection efficiency of this copolymer.

Figure 9. In vitro gene transfection efficiency in COS-7 cells as a function of N/P ratio with various copolymer hydroxyl compositions in (a) serum-free and (b) serum-containing media. Nontoxic N/P ratios chosen for luciferase transfection. Values represent mean ( SD (n = 4).

’ CONCLUSIONS Copolymer binding affinity significantly influenced overall transfection efficiency of DNA delivery vehicles, and the incorporation of hydroxyl sites offers a safe and effective alternative to more highly charged copolymers for nonviral gene delivery. An intermediate binding affinity between polymer and pDNA was ideal for obtaining high transfection efficiency through the variation of functional substituents. Conventional free radical polymerization afforded PVIM for subsequent postpolymerization modification to produce novel imidazolium copolymers of various charge densities and hydroxyl concentrations, which allowed for precise structuretransfection efficiency studies. MTT assays revealed imidazolium copolymers with quaternization values above 25 mol % exhibited significant toxicity; however, copolymers containing 25 mol % cationic charge or less, displayed negligible toxicity. DNA binding and heparin competitive binding assays indicated higher charge density and hydroxyl incorporation resulted in increased binding affinity between polymer and pDNA. Luciferase expression assays found 25 mol % cationic charge as the ideal charge density for the cationic polyelectrolyte. In addition, a repeating unit containing one hydroxyl group was unexpectedly more effective than zero or two hydroxyl groups for pDNA delivery. DLS confirmed that 25 mol % charge and the presence of one hydroxyl group resulted in an intermediate DNA binding affinity was ideal for effective DNA delivery. ’ ASSOCIATED CONTENT

bS

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H NMR characterization of the copolymers. This material is available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org. Supporting Information.

’ AUTHOR INFORMATION Figure 10. Polyplex hydrodynamic diameter (() and ζ-potential (9) as a function of hydroxyl number. The N/P ratios chosen exhibited the greatest transfection efficiency for each quaternization percentage investigated. Values represent mean ( SD (n = 3).

expression decreased 81%; PEVIM25 luciferase expression decreased 97%; and PHEVIM25 and PDHVIM25 decreased 90 and 67%, respectively. The hydroxyl-containing imidazolium copolymers exhibited a smaller decrease in luciferase expression than PEVIM25. PDHVIM25 decreased in luciferase expression dramatically less compared to all samples including Superfect. These results agreed with Xu et al.48 and Ma et al.49 who found the addition of hydroxyl groups to a cationic polymer shielded the positive surface charge reducing protein aggregation. This charge screening increased transfection efficiency compared to polymers without a hydroxyl group.

Corresponding Author

*E-mail: [email protected].

’ ACKNOWLEDGMENT This material is based upon work supported in part by the Macromolecular Interfaces with Life Sciences (MILES) Integrative Graduate Education and Research Traineeship (IGERT) of the National Science Foundation under Agreement No. DGE0333378. This material is also based on work supported in part by the U.S. Army Research Office under Grant No. W911NF-071-0452 Ionic Liquids in Electro-Active Devices (ILEAD) MURI. ’ REFERENCES (1) Li, S. D.; Huang, L. Gene Ther. 2006, 13, 1313–1319. (2) Gao, X.; Kim, K.-S.; Liu, D. AAPS J. 2007, 9, E92–E104. 2249

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